Mixed lead carboxylates relevant to soap formation in oil and tempera paintings: the study of the crystal structure by complementary XRPD and ssNMR

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Long-chain lead carboxylates, on the one hand, represent compounds for versatile industrial applications in high-tech industries, while on the other hand, they are predominant constituents of secondary products of saponification of paint layers in works of art. Affecting significantly the appearance and stability of painted works of art, saponification is one of the most serious problems of preservation of cultural heritage objects. Despite their versatility as well as hazardousness, there is a paucity of single-crystal X-ray structures of long-chain carboxylates, due to difficulties in preparing single crystals of sufficient quality.

We studied the crystal structure of polycrystalline mixed lead carboxylates of the formula Pb(C16)2−x(C18)x (x = 0; 0.25; 0.5; 0.75; 1; 1.5; 2), where C16 and C18 stand for hexadecanoate (palmitate) and octadecanoate (stearate) anions, respectively, by complementary X-ray powder diffraction (XRPD) and 13C and 207Pb solid state NMR (ssNMR).